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- Федор Достоевский
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Petersburg
,
and
showing
little
change
from
their
original
form
and
colour
.
They
are
solidly
built
,
and
are
remarkable
for
the
thickness
of
their
walls
,
and
for
the
fewness
of
their
windows
,
many
of
which
are
covered
by
gratings
.
On
the
ground-floor
there
is
usually
a
money-changer
's
shop
,
and
the
owner
lives
over
it
.
Without
as
well
as
within
,
the
houses
seem
inhospitable
and
mysterious
--
an
impression
which
is
difficult
to
explain
,
unless
it
has
something
to
do
with
the
actual
architectural
style
.
These
houses
are
almost
exclusively
inhabited
by
the
merchant
class
.
Arrived
at
the
gate
,
the
prince
looked
up
at
the
legend
over
it
,
which
ran
:
"
House
of
Rogojin
,
hereditary
and
honourable
citizen
.
"
He
hesitated
no
longer
;
but
opened
the
glazed
door
at
the
bottom
of
the
outer
stairs
and
made
his
way
up
to
the
second
storey
.
The
place
was
dark
and
gloomy-looking
;
the
walls
of
the
stone
staircase
were
painted
a
dull
red
.
Rogojin
and
his
mother
and
brother
occupied
the
whole
of
the
second
floor
.
The
servant
who
opened
the
door
to
Muishkin
led
him
,
without
taking
his
name
,
through
several
rooms
and
up
and
down
many
steps
until
they
arrived
at
a
door
,
where
he
knocked
.
Parfen
Rogojin
opened
the
door
himself
.
On
seeing
the
prince
he
became
deadly
white
,
and
apparently
fixed
to
the
ground
,
so
that
he
was
more
like
a
marble
statue
than
a
human
being
.
The
prince
had
expected
some
surprise
,
but
Rogojin
evidently
considered
his
visit
an
impossible
and
miraculous
event
.
He
stared
with
an
expression
almost
of
terror
,
and
his
lips
twisted
into
a
bewildered
smile
.
"
Parfen
!
perhaps
my
visit
is
ill-timed
.
I
--
I
can
go
away
again
if
you
like
,
"
said
Muishkin
at
last
,
rather
embarrassed
.
"
No
,
no
;
it
's
all
right
,
come
in
,
"
said
Parfen
,
recollecting
himself
.
They
were
evidently
on
quite
familiar
terms
.
In
Moscow
they
had
had
many
occasions
of
meeting
;
indeed
,
some
few
of
those
meetings
were
but
too
vividly
impressed
upon
their
memories
.
They
had
not
met
now
,
however
,
for
three
months
.